Peter C. Brown is a writer and former management consultant. Henry L. Roediger III is James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor of Psychology at Washington University in St. Louis. Mark A. McDaniel is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Center for Integrative Research on Cognition, Learning, and Education (CIRCLE) at Washington University in St. Louis.
If you want to read a lively and engaging book on the science of
learning, this is a must… Make It Stick benefits greatly from its
use of stories about people who have achieved mastery of complex
knowledge and skills. Over the course of the book, the authors
weave together stories from an array of learners—surgeons, pilots,
gardeners, and school and university students—to illustrate their
arguments about how successful learning takes place… This is a rich
and resonant book and a pleasurable read that will leave you
pondering the processes through which you, and your students,
acquire new knowledge and skills.
*Times Higher Education*
Many educators are interested in making use of recent findings
about the human brain and how we learn… Make It Stick [is] the
single best work I have encountered on the subject. Anyone with an
interest in teaching or learning will benefit from reading this
book, which not only presents thoroughly grounded research but does
so in an eminently readable way that is accessible even to
students.
*Chronicle of Higher Education*
We have made Make It Stick a touchstone for our instructors…to gain
a real advantage for our learners as they tackle some of the
toughest work in the world.
*Carl Czech, former Senior Instructional Systems
Specialist/Advisor, US Navy SEALs*
It is surprising to me [that] we have such highly educated people
coming to medical school who haven’t thought that deeply about
learning. I feel like we are teaching the gospel of Make it Stick
during our first weeks with the students…With the immense time
pressure you have as a medical student, the importance of these
principles becomes very clear to them.
*Randall King, Harry C. McKenzie Professor of Cell Biology, Harvard
Medical School*
It’s an illuminating read…Learning ability is probably the most
important skill you can have. Unfortunately, lots of the techniques
for learning that we pick up in school don't help with long-term
recall — like cramming or highlighting… For a deeper dig into the
science of learning, make sure to pick up Make It Stick.
*Business Insider*
Aimed primarily at students, parents, and teachers, Make It Stick
also offers practical advice for learners of all ages, at all
stages of life… With its credible challenge to conventional wisdom,
Make It Stick does point the way forward, with a very real prospect
of tangible and enduring benefits.
*Psychology Today*
Make It Stick will help you become a much more productive learner.
[It] presents a compelling case for why we are attracted to the
wrong strategies for learning and teaching―and what we can do to
remedy our approaches… In clear language, Make It Stick explains
the science underlying how people learn. But the authors don’t
simply recite the research; they show readers how it is applied in
real-life learning scenarios, with engaging stories of real people
in academic, professional, and sports environments… The learning
strategies proposed in this book can be implemented immediately, at
no cost, and to great effect.
*TD Magazine*
If I could, I would assign all professors charged with teaching
undergraduates one book: Make It Stick: The Science of Successful
Learning… It lays out what we know about the science of learning in
clear, accessible prose. Every educator—and parent, and student,
and professional—ought to have it on their own personal
syllabus.
*Annie Murphy Paul, author of The Extended Mind*
The authors have provided a great service for educators by
capturing the important lessons from decades of research in the
learning sciences…It should be highly recommended reading for
anyone in the teaching, learning, and training professions.
*Robert H. Bruininks, Professor and President Emeritus, University
of Minnesota*
This is a quite remarkable book. It describes important research
findings with startling implications for how we can improve our own
learning, teaching, and coaching. Even more, it shows us how more
positive attitudes toward our own abilities—and the willingness to
tackle the hard stuff—enables us to achieve our goals. The
compelling stories bring the ideas out of the lab and into the real
world.
*Robert Bjork, University of California, Los Angeles*
Learning is essential and life-long. Yet as these authors argue
convincingly, people often use exactly the wrong strategies and
don't appreciate the ones that work. We’ve learned a lot in the
last decade about applying cognitive science to real-world
learning, and this book combines everyday examples with clear
explanations of the research. It’s easy to read—and should be easy
to learn from, too!
*Daniel L. Schacter, author of The Seven Sins of Memory*
Anyone who teaches anything would benefit from reading this book:
coaches, tutors, classroom teachers, parents, even corporate
trainers. Instead of doing what we’ve always done and wondering why
some learners just don’t get it, we can take a different approach
that’s based on research, even if it seems counterintuitive.
*Cult of Pedagogy*
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